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TRANSCRIPT
True to Life
Why Truth Matters
Michael P. Lynch
A Bradford Book
The MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts
London, England
Contents
Preface xi
Introduction 1
Part I Cynical Myths 7
1 Truisms about Truth 9
The Conversation-stopper 9
Truth Is Objective 10
Truth Is Good 12
Truth Is a Worthy Goal of Inquiry 13
Truth Is Worth Caring about for Its Own Sake 15
Good Ideas and Bad 19
2 Is the Truth Unattainable? 21
Nightmare 21
A Map of the World 22
Safety 27
3 Is Truth Relative? 31
Man Is the Measure 31
Simple(minded) Relativism 32
Truth as Power 35
Relativism without Nihilism 41
4 The Truth Hurts 45
Dangerous Knowledge 45
Exceptions That Prove the Rule 46
Context and Significance 51
Questions and Answers 54
Part II False Theories 59
5 Truth as a Means to an End 61
Round and Round We Go 61
The Right Tool for the Job 63
Why (Classical) Pragmatism Doesn’t Work 66
A More Coherent Suggestion? 68
Differences That Make a Difference 70
6 Truth and the Scientific Image 75
Naturalism and Human Values 75
Truth as What Science Tells Us 77
Mind as Map 83
Moore’s Problem 88
Naturalism as Nihilism 91
The Motivational Tractor-beam 93
The Possibility of Pluralism 95
7 Truth as Fiction 101
Analogies 101
Nietzchean Lessons? 102
Minimalism 107
Part III Why Truth Matters 117
8 Truth and Happiness 119
A Personal Question 119
Know Thyself 120
Caring about Truth 128
Integrity 131
Happiness 136
More Questions, More Answers 143
9 Sweet Lies 147
Liar, Liar 147
Sincerity 153
10 Truth and Liberal Democracy 159
We Are Not Lying 159
The Social Value of Truth 160
viii Contents
Truth and Rights 162
The Silence of Slavery 174
Epilogue 179
Notes 183
Index 201
Contents ix
Introduction
In early 2003 President Bush claimed that Iraq was attempting to purchase
the materials necessary to build nuclear weapons.1 Although White House
officials subsequently admitted they lacked adequate evidence to believe this
was true, various members of the administration dismissed the issue, noting
that whether or not every claim made by the president was accurate, the im-
portant thing was that the subsequent invasion of Iraq achieved stability in
the region and the liberation of the country.2
Many U.S. citizens apparently agreed. After all, there were other reasons to
depose the Hussein regime. And the belief that Iraq was an imminent nuclear
threat had rallied us together and provided an easy justification to doubters
of the nobility of our cause. So what if it wasn’t really true? To many, it seemed
naive to worry about something as abstract as the truth or falsity of these
claims when we could concern ourselves with the things that really matter—
such as protecting ourselves from terrorism and ensuring our access to oil. To
paraphrase Nietzsche, the truth may be good, but why not sometimes take
untruth if it gets you where you want to go?
These are important questions. At the end of the day, is it always better to
believe and speak the truth? Does the truth itself really matter? While gener-
alizing is always dangerous, the above responses to the Iraq affair indicate
that many people would look at these questions with a jaundiced eye. We are
rather cynical about the value of truth.
Politics isn’t the only place that one finds this sort of skepticism. A similar
attitude is commonplace among some of our most prominent public intel-
lectuals. Indeed, under the banner of postmodernism, cynicism about truth
and related notions like objectivity and knowledge has become the semioffi-
cial philosophical stance of many academic disciplines. Roughly speaking,
the attitude is that objective truth is an illusion and “truth” is just another
name for power. Consequently, if truth is valuable at all, it is valuable—as
power is—merely as a means.
Stanley Fish, a prominent literary critic and Dean at the University of Illi-
nois at Chicago, has recently cranked up the antitruth rhetoric even further.3
Not only is objective truth an illusion, according to Fish, even worrying
about the nature of truth in the first place is a waste of time. Debating over an
abstract idea like truth is like debating over whether Ted Williams was a bet-
ter pure hitter than Hank Aaron: amusing, but irrelevant to today’s game.
Paradoxically, Fish’s reasons for thinking this are a consequence of his par-
ticular theory of truth. According to Fish, philosophical discussions about
truth are a waste of time because he thinks that truth has no value. Further-
more, he thinks this is what we already believe. Sure, we may say we want to
believe the truth, but what we really desire, he says, is to believe what is use-
ful. Good beliefs are useful beliefs, those that get us what we want, whether
that is nicer suits, bigger tax cuts, or a steady source of oil for our SUVs. At the
end of the day, the truth of what we believe and say is beside the point. What
matters are the consequences.
Fish’s rough and ready pragmatism taps into one of our deeper intellectual
veins. It appeals to the United States of America’s collective self-image as a
square-jawed action hero. And it may partly explain why the outcry against
the White House’s deception over the war in Iraq was rather muted. It is not
just that we believe that “united we stand,” it is that deep down, many of us
are prone to think that it is results, not principles, that matter. Like Fish and
Bush, some of us find worrying over abstract principles like truth to be boring
and irrelevant nitpicking, best left to the nerds who watch C-Span and worry
about whether the death penalty is “fair.”
Of course, many other intellectuals are eager to defend the idea that truth
matters. Unfortunately, however, some defenses of the value of truth just end
up undermining that value in a different way. There is a tendency for some to
believe, for example, that caring about truth means caring about the “absolutely
certain” truths of old. This has always been a familiar tune on the political right,
whistled with fervor by writers from Allan Bloom to Robert Bork, but its vol-
ume has only appeared to increase since September 11. U.S. citizens have lost
their “moral compass” and need to sharpen their vision with “moral clarity.”
Liberal inspired relativism is weakening the nation’s resolve, we are told; in
order to prevail (against terrorism, the “assault” on family values, and the like)
2 Introduction
we must rediscover our God-given access to the truth. And that truth, it seems,
is that we are right, and everyone else is wrong. Here is William Bennett:
In one form or another, an easy-going relativism, both moral and cultural, is our com-mon wisdom today. But things did not used to be that way. It used to be the case that achild in this country was brought up to revere its institutions and values, to identifywith its customs and traditions, to take pride in its extraordinary achievements, to ven-erate its national symbols. . . . The superior goodness of the American way of life, ofAmerican culture in the broad sense, was the spoken and unspoken message of this on-going instruction in citizenship. If the message was sometimes overdone, or sometimessugarcoated, it was a message backed by the record of history and by the evidence ofeven a child’s senses.4
So in the halcyon days of old when the relativists had yet to scale the garden
wall, the truth was so clear that it could be grasped by “even a child’s senses.”
This is the sort of truth Bennett seems to think really matters. To care about ob-
jective, nonrelative truth is to care about what is simple and felt to be certain.
As a defense of the value of truth, this is self-defeating. First, an unswerving
allegiance to what you believe isn’t a sign that you care about truth. It is a sign
of dogmatism. Caring about truth does not mean never having to admit you
are wrong. On the contrary, caring about truth means that you have to be
open to the possibility that your own beliefs are mistaken. Second, this dog-
matic attitude, the sense of “superiority” Bennett is encouraging, confuses
caring about truth with caring about what you believe is certain. As a result,
it tends to undermine rather than support a concern for truth. For we are
grown-ups, and our vision, unlike that of a child, is more prone to pick out
shades of gray. Consequently, most of us know that it is unlikely that we will
ever be absolutely sure of very much. But if we then confuse the pursuit of
truth with the impossible pursuit of a feeling of certainty, then truth, too, sud-
denly seems out of reach. It becomes a target we’ll never know we’ve hit, and
thus a target no longer worth aiming for in the first place.
Cynicism about truth is widely shared, but it is not inevitable. We are prone
to cynicism not so much because we find it so wonderful, but because we are
confused about what truth is and how it can be valuable. And this in turn
causes us to buy into some of the same tired assumptions about truth. Philoso-
phers like Fish say that since faith in the absolute certainties of old is naive,
truth is without value. Writers like Bennett argue that since truth has value,
we had better get busy rememorizing those absolute certainties. The implicit
assumption of both views is that these are the only two choices: Absolute
Introduction 3
Certain truth with a capital “T,” or no truth at all. With options like these, no
wonder we are prone to throw up our hands.
This book is a philosophical exploration and defense of the idea that truth
matters. I’ll try to convince you that if you care about truth you better not care
about dogma; that a lot, but not all, of what goes under the label “relativism”
is dumb; that you nonetheless don’t have to believe in one true story of the
world; that staying true to yourself is hard but worth it; that being willing to
stand up for what you believe is important for happiness; and that if you care
about your rights, you better care about truth. We need to think our way past
our confusion and shed our cynicism about the value of truth. Otherwise, we
will be unable to act with integrity, to live authentically, and to speak truth to
power.
Specifically, this book can be seen as a defense of four claims: that truth is
objective; that it is good to believe what is true; that truth is a worthy goal of
inquiry; and that truth is worth caring about for its own sake. The argument
proceeds in parts. In the first part, I try to diagnose and refute the most com-
mon confusions and mistaken assumptions that lead us to be cynical about
truth. Some of these confusions I’ve already mentioned: truth doesn’t matter
because it is unattainable; truth doesn’t matter because it is relative; and truth
doesn’t matter because falsehood is often more useful. Each of these ideas is
understandable; but each, I argue, is mistaken. Part II is about certain theories
of truth. Cynicism about truth is not just the result of confusion and misun-
derstanding. It is also the result of the prevalence of certain philosophical the-
ories about what truth is. I discuss and criticize three of the most important.
The third part of the book explains why truth matters. My approach is from
the inside out, so to speak. I begin with some deeply personal reasons for car-
ing about truth; I argue that perhaps surprisingly, it is part of living a happy
life. I next discuss why caring for truth is important in our personal relations
to others. And I end by examining truth’s political value, in particular the
connection between a concern for truth and a concern for human rights.
Thinking through why we care about something can help us come to a bet-
ter understanding of what it is. Thinking about why we should care about
truth tells us two things about it: first, that truth is, in part, a deeply norma-
tive property—it is a value. And second, this is a fact that any adequate the-
ory of truth must account for. In light of this fact, I suggest that truth, like
other values, should be understood as depending on, but not reducible to,
lower-level properties. Yet which properties truth depends or supervenes on
4 Introduction
may change with the type of belief in question. This opens the door to a type
of pluralism: truth in ethics may be realized differently than in physics.
The questions that matter are live ones, ones that face us everyday. “Why
care about truth?” is such a question. For despite our dislike of illusion, we
don’t often care about truth as much as we should: we dissemble, hide behind
ambiguity, refrain from speaking up, we turn away, stop asking questions, ig-
nore reasonable objections, fudge the data, and close our minds. Not caring
about the truth is a type of cowardice. And the very fact that it happens means
that the question of why we should care about truth is both important and
terribly personal.
It also means that our answers to it must be human ones. Consequently, the
value of truth I defend in this book isn’t an abstract, absolute ideal. I have no
interest in putting truth on a pedestal. Truth is worthy of caring about, but it
isn’t worthy of worship. It is only one value among others, and it isn’t even
the most important value—if there even is such a thing. If truth matters, it
must matter to us, in the confusing, conflicted lives of real human beings. If
the argument that follows is sound, we may be confident that it does.
Introduction 5
1 Truisms about Truth
The Conversation-stopper
Ask someone what truth is and you are apt to be greeted by either puzzled si-
lence or nervous laughter. Both reactions are understandable. Truth is one of
those ideas—happiness is another—that we use all the time but are at a loss
to define. This is why the question “What is truth?” is so often treated as
rhetorical.
One of the reasons truth seems so difficult to describe is that we have con-
flicting beliefs about it: we sometimes think it is discovered, sometimes cre-
ated, sometimes knowable, sometimes mysterious. When we use the idea in
ordinary life—as we do when we agree or disagree with what someone has
said—it seems a simple matter. Yet the more we stop to think about it, the
more complicated it becomes.
It would be nice if we could sort out, once and for all, everything we
thought about truth—to find out the whole truth and nothing but the truth
about the truth, as it were. Nice, but practically impossible. The thesis of this
book is much simpler. Of the many things you could believe about truth,
there is at least one that you should believe: truth matters. Truth, I shall try to
convince you, is of urgent importance in both your personal and political life.
The idea that truth matters actually sums up four claims. Together, these
truisms, as I’ll call them, explain what I mean by “truth” and what I mean by
its “mattering.” Accordingly, I begin by introducing these truisms about
truth, with an aim toward convincing you that they are just what I say they
are, obvious truisms. This doesn’t mean that everyone agrees with them. As I
already noted, some of us are confused about truth—we have contradictory
beliefs about it. So we may believe these truisms but also believe something
else that undermines our belief in one or all of them. Moreover, nothing is so
obvious that someone hasn’t proclaimed it to be false, misguided, naive, in-
coherent, impossible, or corrupting for the young. And lots and lots of folks,
as we’ll see, continue to say as much about these four ideas.
Wittgenstein once remarked that the job of the philosopher was to “assem-
ble reminders”—to point out to us what has been right there in front of our
face all along. While this isn’t all that a philosopher does, there is a lot of sense
in this point. The very familiarity of something can make us forget, or even
deny, its importance. When that happens, we need to be reminded of its role
in our everyday life. This is what we need in the case of truth.
Truth Is Objective
If I know anything, it is that I don’t know everything and neither does anyone
else. There are some things we just won’t ever know, and there are other
things that we think we know but don’t. Grant this bit of common sense, and
you are committed to the first truism about truth: truth is objective.
Early on in Shakespeare’s most celebrated play, Hamlet and his rather book-
ish friend Horatio see the ghost of Hamlet’s dead father. Not surprisingly, Ho-
ratio has a hard time coming to grips with the fact that a dead Danish monarch
is haunting the castle battlements. Hamlet’s response to Horatio’s worrying
is brusque: there are more things in heaven and earth, he says, than dreamt of
in Horatio’s philosophy. Hamlet’s point is to remind Horatio that he doesn’t
know it all because the universe is bigger than we are.
Not only, like Hamlet, are we sometimes ignorant; we also make mistakes.
People once believed that the Earth was flat. Most of us now regard this as a
rather silly idea. But imagine for a moment living in a time before advanced
mathematics, before long-distance sea voyages, before airplanes, before pho-
tographs. Would you believe the Earth was flat? Of course you would. Just
look at it, you would say, gesturing off toward the (flat) horizon.
Even well-supported scientific theories can be wrong. Seventeenth-century
chemists, for example, noted correctly that something similar happens when
metal rusts and wood burns. Undergoing both processes results in a loss of
mass. According to the very best science of the day, the common cause was
the release of an invisible gas, “phlogiston,” into the atmosphere.1 Since this
gas took up space, had weight, and so on, its loss explained why both metal
and wood got smaller after rusting and burning. It is easy to snicker at the
phlogiston theory nowadays, since while there is a gas involved in both pro-
10 Chapter 1
cesses, it is actually oxygen, which is gained, not lost, by the relevant system.
Phlogiston doesn’t exist. Yet the phlogiston theory was a very reasonable hy-
pothesis at the time. It was highly confirmed by the standards of the day. The
most knowledgeable scientists believed it. Yet it was mistaken.
The ever-present risks of ignorance and error underline the fact that what-
ever else it may turn out to be, truth is objective. Just because we believe it
doesn’t mean it’s true, and just because it is true doesn’t mean we’ll believe it.
Believing, as we say, doesn’t make it so. The truth of Mt. Everest being the
tallest mountain, for example, has nothing to do with whether I believe it or
not. What matters is whether Mt. Everest really is the tallest mountain, and if
it is, then presumably it would be even if no one had ever been around to see
it. Of course, if there weren’t any language-users around, then Mt. Everest
wouldn’t be called “Mt. Everest,” since it wouldn’t be called anything at all.
But it would still be there, just as it would if we had called it something else,
like “Mt. Zippy.”
Voltaire once quipped that “let us define truth, while waiting for a better
definition . . . as a statement of the facts as they are.”2 Voltaire meant this as a
joke, but as working definitions go, it is pretty good. And Voltaire himself was
probably thinking of a famous remark of Aristotle’s that “to say of that which
is, that it is, and of that which is not, that it is not, is true.”3 This is even better.
When we say something true, the world is as we say it is. And when we believe
truly, the world is as we believe it to be. It is the way the world is that matters
for truth, not what we believe about the world.
In this sense, the objectivity of truth isn’t, or shouldn’t be anyway, contro-
versial. As I’ve indicated, it is a consequence of accepting what everyone al-
ready does (or should) admit: we don’t know everything and we can make
mistakes.
The idea that truth is objective is sometimes put by saying that true beliefs
correspond to reality. And that is fine, just so long as we realize that this phrase
leaves room for disagreement about the nature and extent of what “correspon-
dence” and “reality” amount to. Some hold that beliefs can’t be true unless
they correspond to mind-independent, physical objects like mountains, elec-
trons, battleships, and barbers. On these theories, truth is always radically
objective, since what makes our beliefs true on such accounts is always their
relationship to real physical objects. This is obviously a matter of high philo-
sophical theory, however, and not a truism. You don’t have to believe it in or-
der to believe that truth is objective in the minimal sense I’ve been describing.
Truisms about Truth 11
We don’t have to know everything about something to be able to talk about
it. Take, for example, the hard drive of my computer, which (I blush to confess)
I know next to nothing about. I don’t know what it is made out of (little bits
of metal and plastic probably), I don’t know where it is exactly, and I don’t
know really how it gets its job done. But I do know what that job is: it acts as the
main information-storage facility for my computer, where it keeps the various
programs and files. For most purposes, this working description of a hard drive
is good enough. It picks out what we generally mean when we talk about such
things. Indeed, a lot of our ordinary concepts are like this, and it is a good
thing too. This is why we can talk about something like gravity in a meaning-
ful way before we know its real underlying nature, or even if we never learn
about its real nature. We know what gravity does before we know what it is.
Our basic belief in truth’s objectivity is like my basic idea of my computer’s
hard drive. We know the job of true beliefs, even if we don’t know exactly how
they get that job done. True beliefs are those that portray the world as it is and
not as we may hope, fear, or wish it to be.
Truth Is Good
Nobody likes to be wrong. If anything is a truism, that is. And it reveals some-
thing else we believe about truth: that it is good. More precisely, it is good to
believe what is true.
Why do we find it so obvious that it is good to believe what is true? One rea-
son has to do with the purpose of the very concept of truth itself. Humans
tend to disagree with each other: we squabble, spat, form different opinions,
and construct different theories. Yet the very possibility of disagreement over
opinions requires there to be a difference between getting it right and getting
it wrong. When I assert an opinion on some question, I assert what I believe
is correct. You do the same. And when we disagree, obviously, we disagree
about whose opinion is correct. So if there is no such thing as reaching one (or
none, or even more than one) correct answer to a given question, then we
can’t really disagree in opinion.
My point is that we distinguish truth from falsity because we need a way of
separating correct from incorrect beliefs, statements, and the like. In particu-
lar, we need a way of distinguishing between beliefs for which we have some
evidence, or are endorsed by the Pentagon, or denounced by the president, or
make us money, or friends, or simply feel good, and those that actually end up
12 Chapter 1
getting it right. It is not that we can’t evaluate beliefs in all those other ways—
of course we can. We can, and should, criticize a belief for not being based on
good evidence, for example. But that sort of evaluation depends for its force
on a more basic sort of evaluation. We think it is good to have some evidence
for our beliefs because we think that beliefs that are based on evidence are
more likely to be true. We criticize people who engage in wishful thinking be-
cause wishful thinking leads to believing falsehoods.
So a primary point of having a concept of truth is that we need a very basic
way of appraising and evaluating our beliefs about the world. Indeed, this is
built right into our language: the very word “true” has an evaluative dimen-
sion. Part of what you are doing when you say something is true is com-
mending it as something good to believe. Just as “right” and “wrong” are the
most basic ways to evaluate actions as correct or incorrect, so “true” and
“false” are our most basic ways to evaluate beliefs as correct or incorrect.
Indeed, the connection between belief and the truth is so tight that unless
you think something is true, you don’t even count as believing it. To believe
is just to take as true. If you don’t care whether something is true, you don’t re-
ally believe it. William James put this by saying that truth “is the good in the
way of belief.”4 Others sometimes say that truth is the aim of belief. This is not
literally so of course. Beliefs don’t literally aim at anything. But both expres-
sions get at the idea that truth is a property that is good for beliefs to have.
Since propositions are the content of beliefs, and it is the content of a belief
and not the act of believing that is true, we can also say that truth is the prop-
erty that makes a proposition good to believe. In believing, we are guided by
the value of truth: other things being equal, it is good to believe a proposition when
and only when it is true. Since what is good comes in degrees, we can also put
this “norm” or rule by saying that other things being equal, it is better to be-
lieve something when and only when it is true. Or more loosely: it is better to
believe what is true than what is false. I don’t mean that it is necessarily
morally better. Things can be better or worse, good or bad in different ways.
Clear writing is an aesthetic good; tasty food is a culinary good; and believing
true propositions, we might say, is a cognitive or intellectual good.
Truth Is a Worthy Goal of Inquiry
Values guide action. The value that, other things being equal, it is good to
keep my promises implies that I ought, other things being equal, to try to
Truisms about Truth 13
keep my promises. The goodness of keeping one’s promises gives me a reason
for acting in some ways rather than others. So too with truth: it is good, other
things being equal, to believe what is true, and intuitively, this gives me a rea-
son to do certain things; most obviously, I should, other things being equal,
pursue the truth. The goodness of believing what is true means that having
true beliefs, like repaid debts or kept promises, is a goal worthy of pursuit.
That true belief is a goal worthy of pursuit does not mean that we pursue this
goal directly. The pursuit of truth is in fact always indirect. This is because be-
lief isn’t something we have direct control over. We can’t believe on demand.
If you doubt this, command yourself to believe right now that you have a blue
flower growing out of your head. Of course, you can straighten up, deepen
your voice, and chant the words “I’ve got a blue flower growing out of my
head,” but that alone won’t get you to believe it, for the fact is (at least I hope
it is a fact) that you don’t have a blue flower growing out of your head.
Nonetheless, we certainly do have indirect control over what we believe,
and this is control enough. I can affect what I believe by putting myself in cer-
tain situations and avoiding other situations. That is, I can control how I go
about pursuing the truth, by paying careful attention to the evidence, giving
and asking for reasons, doing adequate research, remaining open-minded,
and so on. In short, in saying that truth is a worthy goal, we imply that you
ought (other things being equal) to adopt policies, methods, and habits of in-
quiry that are reliable, or that are likely to result in true beliefs. We ordinarily
think that it is good to give and ask for reasons, good to be open-minded,
good to have empirical evidence for one’s scientific conclusions, because
these are methods of inquiry that lead us to the truth. If we didn’t value true
beliefs, we wouldn’t value these sorts of activities; and we value these sorts of
activities because we think they will, more often than not, lead us to believ-
ing truly rather than falsely.
So we pursue true belief via engaging in inquiry. I am using the word “in-
quiry” here in a very general sense. I mean by it not just the methods for ac-
quiring true beliefs I just mentioned, but all the various processes, practices,
and activities we engage in when both posing and answering questions that in-
terest us. This obviously includes both theoretical and experimental work in
the various sciences, but also more mundane activities, like the sort of diag-
nostic tests you might run on your car to find out the source of the weird
thumping noise it is making, or when one looks under the bed for a lost sock.
When doing such things, we aren’t happy with any old answer. Whatever else
14 Chapter 1
we might want, we want the truth about the matters that interest us. So in in-
quiry, one of the things we are aiming at is having true beliefs, or truth, in short.
Intuitively, our second and third truisms are closely connected: since it is
good to believe what is true, truth is worthy of pursuit, of being a goal of
inquiry.
Truth Is Worth Caring about for Its Own Sake
Suppose I had a machine that allowed you to experience whatever you want.
Once inside, floating in the tank, you live in a virtual reality of your own de-
sign—one filled with experiences of adoring friends, marvelous adventures,
spectacular food, good sex, and deep conversations. None of it would be real,
of course, but it would seem to be. It could even be arranged so that once in-
side the machine, you completely forget that you are inside a machine.
There is only one catch. Once inside, you can never come out.
Would you do it?
Most of us will probably say no. While we certainly wouldn’t mind being in
the machine for a few hours or even weeks, we wouldn’t want to spend the
rest of our life in a virtual world. Others of us, whose actual lives are filled with
tragedy and poverty, might be more inclined to opt in for the long term. But
even so, most would prefer having their problems truly disappear to living a
life where they only seem to disappear. The machine produces beautiful illu-
sions, but we want more than illusions. We want the truth, warts and all.
Scenarios like this are found throughout history and philosophy, not to
mention contemporary culture. In the movie The Matrix, for example, the
main character is given a choice between taking two pills. If he chooses one
pill, he remains in a life of perfect illusion (supplied again by the ubiquitous
all-powerful computer). He will not even remember that he made such a
choice. Everything will go on as before. But if he chooses the other pill, he
finds out the truth about his life and reality, a truth that he is warned will be
unpleasant. He chooses, unsurprisingly to the audience, the truth.
Science-fiction scenarios like this are popular partly because in thinking
about what we would do in such imaginary situations, we figure out what we
care about. As I’ll show more fully in a moment, reflecting on these sorts of sit-
uations, at least for most of us, suggests that we care about the truth for more
than just the benefits it brings us. Of course, we don’t necessarily need science
fiction to tell us this. There are times in all of our lives when we simply want
Truisms about Truth 15
to know for no other reason than the knowing itself. Curiosity is not always
motivated by practical concerns. Consider extremely abstract mathematical
conjectures. With regard to at least some such conjectures, knowing their
truth would get us no closer to anything else we want. Nonetheless, if we were
forced to choose between believing truly or falsely about the matter, we
would prefer, at least to some tiny degree, the former. If we have to guess, we
prefer to guess correctly. And of course, we sometimes care about the truth
despite extremely impractical consequences. People often wish to know the
truth about a spouse’s infidelity even when there is an excellent chance that
nothing productive will come of it. Similarly, many people wish to know
when they are dying of a untreatable disease, even if they can do nothing to
prevent it, and even if that knowledge has no practical value for their actual
state of health.
The fact that we value truth for its own sake doesn’t mean we don’t also
value it as a means to other ends. Indeed, the most obvious reason to pursue
true beliefs is that believing the truth can get us all sorts of other things we
want. Believing the truth is practically advantageous. Imagine crossing the
street; looking both ways, you try to estimate the speed of approaching traf-
fic. In making this and countless other decisions, you need to get it right. Oth-
erwise bad things will happen, like getting run over by a bus. Believing the
truth is valuable because it is a means to other ends—sturdy bridges, cures
for diseases, and safety. We can sum this up by saying that truth is instru-
mentally good.
Many of the things we aim at in life, from money to legible handwriting,
are only instrumentally good. We care about them not for their own sake but
for what they can do for us. Most of us believe dollar bills are like this. Having
dollars is good, no doubt, but only as a means to getting other things—a
house, food, clothes, and the like. There is nothing valuable about the paper
itself.
Something is normative if it is worthy of aiming at, or caring about. But
something is deeply normative, or a value properly so-called, when it is worthy
of caring about for its own sake. Love is arguably like this. Being in love with
someone isn’t good only as a means to other things. No doubt, it can lead to
other goods (sex, contentment, a richer life, etc.), but that is clearly not the
whole story. People value love even when it is highly impractical, or even
detrimental to their pursuit of other ends. Love is worth caring about for its
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own sake. Indeed, to love someone just because it gets you something you
want arguably means that you don’t really love him or her at all.
So one way of thinking about our fourth truism about truth is that truth is
more like love than money. We—or at least most of us—care about truth, at
least sometimes, for more than instrumental reasons. Truth is deeply norma-
tive; it is worth caring about for its own sake.
Of our four truisms about truth, this is perhaps the most contentious. Yet as
I noted earlier, thinking about certain hypothetical situations can help you
figure out whether you believe it. So let’s think more carefully about the sort of
imaginary situation I mentioned at the beginning of this section. In thinking
about our reactions to such situations and what those reactions show, it will
be helpful to proceed in steps. The first step is to see whether we have what I’ll
call a basic preference for the truth. By a “basic preference” I mean a prefer-
ence for something that can’t be explained by our preference for other things.
Avoidance of pain is perhaps a basic preference; preference for money is not.
If truth was not a basic preference, then if I had two beliefs B1 and B2 with
identical instrumental value, I should not prefer to believe B1 rather than B2.
The considerations above already point to the fact that this isn’t so, however.
In particular, if we didn’t have a basic preference for the truth, it would be
hard to explain why we find the prospect of being undetectably wrong so dis-
turbing. Think about a modification of the experience-machine scenario we
began with. Some super neuroscientists give you the choice between contin-
uing to live normally, or having your brain hooked up to a supercomputer
that will make it seem as if you are continuing to live normally (even though
you’re really just floating in a vat somewhere). When in the vat, you will con-
tinue to have all the same experiences you would have in the real world. Be-
cause of this, you would believe that you are reading a book, that you are
hungry, and so on. In short, your beliefs and experiences will be the same, but
most of your beliefs will be false.
If we didn’t really prefer true beliefs to false ones, we would be simply am-
bivalent about this choice. Vat, no vat; who cares? But we don’t say this. We
don’t want to live in the vat, even though doing so would make no difference
to what we experience or believe. This suggests that we have a basic prefer-
ence for truth.
Some may protest that we want more than mere experiences out of life, and
it is this fact—not any preference for truth—that makes us prefer the real
Truisms about Truth 17
world over the vat. So consider another scenario, one dreamed up by Bertrand
Russell. Suppose that, unbeknownst to us, the world began yesterday—it
seems older, but it isn’t. If I really lived in a Russell world, as I’ll call it, almost
all my beliefs about the past would be false. Yet my desires would be equally
satisfied in both worlds.5 This is because the future of both worlds unfolds in
exactly the same way. If I believe truly in the actual world that if I open the
refrigerator I’ll get a beer, then I’ll get a beer if I open the refrigerator. Since
events in the Russell world are just the same as in the actual world once it be-
gins ticking along, I will also get that beer in the Russell world if I open the re-
frigerator, even if (in the Russell world) I believe falsely that I put it there
yesterday. In other words, whatever plans I accomplish now, I would also ac-
complish if the world had begun yesterday, despite the fact that in that case,
my plans would be based on false beliefs about the past. Yet, given the choice
between living in the actual world and living in a Russell world, I strongly pre-
fer the actual world. Of course, once “inside” that world, I wouldn’t see any
difference between it and the real world; in both worlds, after all, events crank
along in the same way. But that is beside the point. For the fact remains that
thinking about the worlds only insofar as they are identical in instrumental
value, there is difference right now between the two worlds that matters to me.
Even when it has no effect on my other preferences, I—and presumably you
as well—prefer true beliefs to false ones.
In preferring not to live in either the vat or the Russell world, I do not simply
prefer that the world be a certain way. My preference involves my beliefs and
their proper functioning, so to speak. For not only do I not want to live in a
world where I am a brain in a vat, I also don’t want to live in a world where I am
not so deceived, but believe that I am. That is, if such and such is the case, I want
to believe that it is, and if I believe that it is, I want it to be the case. We can put
this by saying that I want my beliefs and reality to be a certain way—I want my
beliefs to track reality, to “accord with how the world actually is”—which is
to say I want them to be true.
Moreover, our preference for the truth is not just a mere preference—like a
preference for chocolate ice cream. It goes deeper than that. That is apparent
when I think about my attitudes toward my preference. Like many other
people, I not only prefer the truth for its own sake, I also don’t want to be the
sort of person who doesn’t—who would prefer the life of illusion. I want to be
the sort of person, for example, who has intellectual integrity, who, other
things being equal, is willing to pursue what is true even when it is dangerous
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or inconvenient or expensive to do so. I not only desire the truth, I desire to
desire the truth. I would no more take a pill that would make me ambivalent
about living as a brain in a vat than I would choose to live as a brain in a vat.
This suggests that my desire for the truth is not a mere passing fancy; it is
grounded in what matters to me. I don’t just prefer the truth, in other words,
I care about it. Normally, the fact that we care about something is very good
evidence that we find it worthy of caring about.6 Accordingly, if you care
about truth for its own sake, then you presumably believe our last truism,
namely that truth is worthy of caring about in just that way.
This, then, is what I mean by saying we can learn about what we believe
from these science-fiction stories: for many of us, our intuitive reactions to
these cases suggest that we have a basic preference for the truth; that this pref-
erence matters to us; and thus that we believe that truth is worth caring about
for its own sake. If you prefer not to live in the vat, or in a Russell world, then
you implicitly accept that where the belief that p and the belief that not-p
have identical instrumental value, it is better, just on grounds of truth alone,
to have the true belief rather than the false belief.
Of course, none of this proves that everyone accepts this, or for those of us
that do, that we are right to accept it. That is what the rest of this book is about.
But it does show us where we stand.
Good Ideas and Bad
So here are our truisms about truth:
Truth is objective.
Truth is good.
Truth is a worthy goal of inquiry.
Truth is worth caring about for its own sake.
This is what I mean by saying that truth matters. I mean that beliefs that por-
tray the world as it is are good and worth caring about, not only for their con-
sequences but for their own sake. These truisms each remind us of something
essential about truth and the role it plays in our lives. They remind us that
truth, like courage or keeping a promise, is something philosophers call a
thick sort of value: it has normative and nonnormative aspects. When we cor-
rectly describe an act as courageous, we are both describing it and evaluating
it. We are commending it as something to be emulated, saying it is good and
Truisms about Truth 19
so on, and describing it as an action that was done despite the danger of do-
ing it. Both are important and essential facts about courage. Similarly, when
we say that a belief is true, we are at once evaluating it—saying it is correct,
good, worthy of pursuit and so on, and describing it as portraying the world
as it is.7 These are equally essential and interrelated facts about truth.
In defending the idea that truth matters, I’ll be defending these truisms.
From experience, I know that reactions to them are often as wide apart as the
banks of the Mississippi River. Some of you will be saying, “well, duh” and
others will be scoffing so hard their heads hurt. But in truth, these ideas are
not really all that simple; nor are they hopelessly naive. They deserve serious
thought, and I think they are worth fighting for. Crucially, however, I don’t
think that means that we must believe any of the following ideas, with which
our truisms are often grouped:
There is only One Truth.
Only “pure” reason can access the Truth.
Truth is mysterious.
Only some people can know the truth.
We should pursue the truth at all costs.
These are very bad ideas. As it turns out, three of the more common reasons
for rejecting our truisms—for cynicism about the value of truth, in other
words—are based on myths that confuse one or more of these bad ideas with
our truisms. Since these myths and confusions are as common as our truisms
themselves, it is important to get straight on them first. In part II, I’ll discuss
some very different reasons for rejecting some of our truisms. These reasons
are less common, but more serious. They are based not on confusions, but on
bad theories of what truth is. After that, we’ll be ready to tackle the really hard
question: how and why truth matters.
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